This thesis explores a set of legal manuscripts from medieval Wales, known as the Iorwerth recension. These manuscripts are placed in their historical and material settings, and a view of the development of the text is given. From an original thirteenth-century core, a story is told of the recension’s development across a range of further rearrangements and uses across the Middle Ages. The use of the Iorwerth text is analysed for what it might reveal of the intentions and mindset of the copyist. In the second half of the thesis, a more traditional textual account is given of the Iorwerth recension. Volume II contains tables and editions to accompany the arguments in the first volume
This thesis considers late thirteenth and early fourteenth century insular history writing in the ve...
In 1552, Welsh soldier and chronicler Elis Gruffydd (c.1490-c.1552) completed a 2500-folio manuscrip...
This dissertation studies three important textual projects that speak to the conditions of Middle En...
This thesis uses Digital Humanities methodologies to engage with the Cyfraith Hywel (CH) tradition a...
MS Cambridge Corpus Christi College 383 (CCCC 383) is a collection of Anglo-Saxon law-codes and rela...
This study focusses on the writing of history in medieval Wales. Its starting-point is a series of h...
Llywelyn ab Iorwerth (1173-1140) has long been considered one of the leading heroes of Wales. The l...
My dissertation is a palaeographical study of the manuscripts of the works of Gerald of Wales (c. 1...
MS Cambridge Corpus Christi College 383 (CCCC 383) is a collection of Anglo-Saxon law-codes and rela...
This thesis presents a new edition of the major recensions of the Historia Brittonum. It is the firs...
The Auchinleck Manuscript (National Library of Scotland Advocates 19.2.1) was written in London by s...
This thesis examines the uses of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts in the 150 years immediately following the ...
While foreign influences on certain areas of Welsh poetry have long been acknowledged, the extent to...
This thesis (395 pp.) is an edition of a XIVth century transcription of a chronicle in French prose ...
Covering the first dedicated program in the study of and publication of Anglo-Saxon texts, my disser...
This thesis considers late thirteenth and early fourteenth century insular history writing in the ve...
In 1552, Welsh soldier and chronicler Elis Gruffydd (c.1490-c.1552) completed a 2500-folio manuscrip...
This dissertation studies three important textual projects that speak to the conditions of Middle En...
This thesis uses Digital Humanities methodologies to engage with the Cyfraith Hywel (CH) tradition a...
MS Cambridge Corpus Christi College 383 (CCCC 383) is a collection of Anglo-Saxon law-codes and rela...
This study focusses on the writing of history in medieval Wales. Its starting-point is a series of h...
Llywelyn ab Iorwerth (1173-1140) has long been considered one of the leading heroes of Wales. The l...
My dissertation is a palaeographical study of the manuscripts of the works of Gerald of Wales (c. 1...
MS Cambridge Corpus Christi College 383 (CCCC 383) is a collection of Anglo-Saxon law-codes and rela...
This thesis presents a new edition of the major recensions of the Historia Brittonum. It is the firs...
The Auchinleck Manuscript (National Library of Scotland Advocates 19.2.1) was written in London by s...
This thesis examines the uses of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts in the 150 years immediately following the ...
While foreign influences on certain areas of Welsh poetry have long been acknowledged, the extent to...
This thesis (395 pp.) is an edition of a XIVth century transcription of a chronicle in French prose ...
Covering the first dedicated program in the study of and publication of Anglo-Saxon texts, my disser...
This thesis considers late thirteenth and early fourteenth century insular history writing in the ve...
In 1552, Welsh soldier and chronicler Elis Gruffydd (c.1490-c.1552) completed a 2500-folio manuscrip...
This dissertation studies three important textual projects that speak to the conditions of Middle En...